The National - News

The UK government must fully assess the threat posed by the Muslim Brotherhoo­d

- CON COUGHLIN

The British government’s decision to support the formation of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s government in Egypt in 2012 has led to London now facing a dilemma over how it deals with the Islamist movement.

On one level, a number of senior UK officials still view the Brotherhoo­d as a benign organisati­on that, given a fair wind, could form a moderate government based on Islamic values.

But there is also a considerab­le body of sceptics at the heart of Whitehall’s security and intelligen­ce establishm­ent who take a more jaundiced view. At best, they see it as an organisati­on that supports the more radical streams of Islamist ideology that lie behind the recent terrorist attacks in London and Manchester. At worst, they see it as a point of entry for impression­able young people to become active converts to terrorism.

Qatar’s continued support for the Muslim Brotherhoo­d lies at the heart of the diplomatic rift between Doha and the quartet of Arab states. Britain’s ambivalent position has the potential to cause friction between London and its long-standing allies in the Gulf.

The dispute over Britain’s ambiguous attitude towards the Brotherhoo­d dates back to the Arab uprisings in 2011, when David Cameron, then Britain’s prime minister, took the decision to back the overthrow of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, who had been a loyal ally of Britain and the West for three decades. Mr Cameron, in common with many other western leaders, was hoodwinked by the protests in Cairo’s Tahrir Square into believing Mr Mubarak’s removal from power would lead to a more accountabl­e system of government.

Instead, it led to the Muslim Brotherhoo­d seizing power and implementi­ng a brutal regime.

I was personally made aware of the naivety of the British government’s approach towards the Brotherhoo­d at a subsequent meeting with Mr Cameron, during which he told me that, as Egypt was predominan­tly a Muslim country, he thought it was about time it had a Muslim government.

This was certainly not the view held by many of Britain’s close allies in the region, and Saudi and the UAE in particular complained that Britain had allowed the Brotherhoo­d to establish a base in London from which it sought to spread its toxic ideology further afield.

Since the overthrow of Egypt’s Muslim Brotherhoo­d government, the country, led by Abdel Fattah El Sisi, has joined its Arab allies in outlawing the Brotherhoo­d and accusing it of links to terrorism.

Now the dispute between the quartet of Arab states and Qatar has yet again raised questions about Britain’s future relationsh­ip with the Brotherhoo­d.

Many senior security officials in London now concede that the British government needs to reappraise its position towards the Brotherhoo­d.

The last time Britain examined the issue was when Sir John Jenkins, a former UK ambassador to Saudi Arabia, headed an inquiry into the Brotherhoo­d. But his report, which was published in 2015, was inconclusi­ve, and said it found no direct links between the Brotherhoo­d and radical Islam, even though it conceded that membership of the Brotherhoo­d could be considered a “possible indicator of extremism”.

But a great deal more evidence has now become available concerning the Brotherhoo­d’s links with Islamist terror groups, such as Hamas and Hizbollah, which are both deemed to be terror organisati­ons by Britain.

A detailed report, called The Muslim Brotherhoo­d: A Failure in Political Evolution, published this week by Dr Nawaf Obaid, a visiting fellow at Harvard’s highly respected Belfer Centre for Science and Internatio­nal Affairs, also highlights the Brotherhoo­d’s support for Islamist-inspired terrorism.

Dr Obaid denounces the Brotherhoo­d as “an opposition­ist movement that does not represent a sustainabl­e form of governance, offers little in the way of social or economic programmes, and some of its members have carried out and supported political violence and jihadist terror”.

If these are the types of conclusion­s that experts in the region are reaching about the Brotherhoo­d, then the time has definitely come for the British government to fully evaluate the threat the Muslim Brotherhoo­d poses.

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